14 
Stem premorsely rooting (3 in. long), cuticle sott, polished. Pileus 
fragile, purplish bay, nearly black, paler when dry (1 in. high, 14 in. 
broad). Spores 10 long. 
Collybia subelevata W. G. Smith. 
Pileus submembranaceous, tough, campanulate, obtuse, dry, floc- 
cose, opaque, brown (25 in. high, 4 in. broad). Stem elongated, 
hollow, rather slender, slightly attenuated upwards from the premorse 
base, flocculose, pale-brown (7 in. long, 4-3 in. thick); gills adnexed, 
distant, very broad (2 in.), white. 
In woods, amongst stumps. Epping. 
Hygrophorus latitabundus Britz. Hygr. IV., fig. 14. 
Pileus fleshy, convex, then expanded, smooth, sooty, becoming 
yellowish, with a tendency to olive; stem solid, firm, thick, viscid, 
rather scaly above; gills subdecurrent, distant, white. Sacc. Syll., 
No. 1568. 
In woods. Street, Somerset. | 
Pileus 3-4 in. broad. Stem 3-5 in. long, 1 in. thick. Spores 
smaller than in Al. dimacinus (10x 6-74); It is a larger and more 
robust species and has been confounded with it. 
Hygrophorus clivalis Fries. Mon. II. p. 134. 
Whitish, fragile, pileus thin, disc more fleshy, campanulate, then 
expanded, shining not viscid, margin at first bent inwards, then 
spreading, striate; stem solid, short, fragile, attenuated downwards ; 
gills rather narrowed behind, almost free, ventricose, distant, and 
somewhat thick. Sacc. Syll., No. 1607. Hygrophorus fornicatus 
Cooke Illus., t. 933. 
On damp slopes. Holme Lacy. 
Smaller than Hi. fornicatus, with which it has been confounded. 
Spores 6-7 x 4u. 
Marasmius sclerotipes Bres. Fun. Trid., p. 12, t. XI, f. 1. 
Pileus membranaceous, convex, margin inflexed, then plane, um- 
bilicate, rugulose-striate, white, umbilicus yellow, subflocculose (6-8 
mm. broad); gills distant, adnate, white, margin fimbriate; stem 
filiform, pruinose under a lens, pallid rufescent, apex whitish; base 
adnate to a yellowish rufescent sclerotium, equal (12-18 mm. long, 
3-1 mm. thick). Sacc. Syll., No. 2232. Collybia cirrhata Cooke 
Illus., t. 144 B. 
On the ground in swampy places. Epping Forest. 
In Cooke’s IlJustrations this was referred to Collybia cirrhata, with 
